A person’s blood type does not affect their risk of developing severe Covid-19 or of being hospitalized because of the infection, a study finds.
Previous studies have shown that people with blood group A are more at risk of contracting the coronavirus.
To determine whether this was true, U.S. doctors analyzed medical records from more than 100,000 people who had a Covid-19 test in Utah, Idaho and Nevada between March and November 2020.
By comparing their Covid status to blood type, it was found that there was no relationship between the two, debating the earlier findings.
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People are more at risk of contracting the coronavirus if they have blood group A, according to a study. Laboratory-based analysis examined previous reports that blood type affects an individual’s susceptibility to infection with SARS-CoV-2
Blood type is a trait determined by a person’s DNA and depends on the versions of genes inherited from a person’s parents.
These genes dictate the presence of antigens on the surface of red blood cells, the donut-shaped vessels that carry oxygen around the body in arteries and veins.
Antigens are excellent proteins and there are two versions, A and B, which are found on the surface of red blood cells, also called erythrocytes.
Each person has A, B, A and B, or none. So these people have blood group A, B, AB and O respectively, and this is known as the ABO blood group system.
Another antigen on the cells called Rhesus is positive or negative and this determines whether a person is A positive or A negative, for example.
Blood types differ in their commonality depending on geography and ethnicity, but in the UK the most common group is O positive, followed by A positive.
Previous studies had shown that people with type A blood are at greater risk of contracting the virus.


The coronavirus SARS-CoV-2 has a higher affinity for other cells – such as those in the airways – that express a type A specific molecule called an antigen
One study hinted that type A people have more receptors the virus can bind to, making them more susceptible.
But Dr. Jeffrey Anderson, of the Intermountain Medical Center Heart Institute in Salt Lake City, conducted the most comprehensive and controlled analysis to date.
With conflicting reports from China, Europe, Boston, New York, and elsewhere, we embarked on a large, prospective case-control study involving more than 11,000 individuals newly infected with SARS-CoV-2, and found no ABO associations with either disease susceptibility or severity, ”the study authors write in their paper, published today in JAMA Network Open.
“Given the extensive and prospective nature of our study and the strongly zero results, we believe that significant associations of SARS-CoV-2 and Covid-19 with ABO groups are unlikely,” they add.
The researchers cannot explain why the earlier studies came to different conclusions, but cite several factors that may have led to the earlier results.
They say pure coincidence, publication bias, genetic differences, geography and variants may have led to biased data indicating that some blood types are more at risk.
However, the study found that while blood group does not, other factors do indeed increase the risk of Covid-19.
These include being male, being older and also people who are not of white descent.
“In people with Covid-19, hospitalization was associated with male gender and age,” the researchers write. “ICU admission was also associated with male gender and age.”
The data also showed that non-whites, including African Americans; American Indians or Alaskans; Native Hawaiian or Pacific Islanders; Asians; and people who have not disclosed their ethnicity are more likely to test positive.
However, there was no association between these people and the severity of the disease.